Tanguy Ndombele: How has Tottenham midfielder gone from Spurs outcast to key player?
Last updated on .From the section Tottenham
When Tanguy Ndombele was substituted at half-time in a game against Burnley last March and then publicly criticised by his manager Jose Mourinho, it looked like the midfielder's time at Tottenham was coming to an end.
Signed for a club record £54m from Lyon in July 2019, the 24-year-old appeared destined to be remembered as an expensive flop as he was reduced to a bit-part player at Spurs in his first season under Mourinho.
But barely a year later his turnaround has been as impressive as it has swift, with him developing into a key player for Spurs with an eye for an excellent pass and capable of sublime moments of magic - highlighted by his stunning goal in Sunday's 3-1 win at Sheffield United.
With the Blades having just pulled a goal back to make it 2-1 and threaten an unlikely comeback, Ndombele hooked a brilliant, improvised lob over Aaron Ramsdale to make the win safe for Spurs and get their top four challenge back on track.
"He is incredible," said Mourinho after the game. "For me, sometimes you can score a great goal isolated from your performance - in this case the goal confirmed his performance: really, really good."
So, how has Ndombele gone from Spurs outcast to key player?
A change in mindset
When Ndombele first arrived at Spurs two summers ago, he initially made the right impression, scoring on his debut in a 3-1 win against Aston Villa.
He impressed with his strength and eye for a pass but soon found himself in and out of the side as he struggled with niggling injuries and poor fitness.
From then on, he found his game time limited and, after his half-time withdrawal against Burnley and stinging comments from Mourinho in which he said Ndombele's performance in that game was like "having no midfield", it could have been easy for the France international to give up hope of ever making a career for himself at Spurs.
But in the Amazon 'All or Northing' series, Ndombele was shown having a meeting with Tottenham chairman Daniel Levy last summer during which Levy told the Frenchman that the club wanted to keep him but he had to prove himself.
That appeared to spark a change in Ndombele's mindset as he made a determined effort to prove his critics wrong - an approach for which Mourinho gives him full credit.
"It's the player's mentality, the player's will to train hard, the player's will to be available for the team, the player's desire to win, to earn and work a place in the team," he said.
"The door is always open, but the player cannot expect for me to go and bring him. It has to be for the player to walk through that door, and come in the direction of what the team needs from him."
More freedom to flourish
Ndombele arrived at Tottenham as a ball-playing midfielder - one who could help turn defence into attack. The role he plays has not changed from his difficult first season to his - so far - sublime second.
Indeed, a look at a direct comparison between his statistics from 2019-20 to the current campaign does not show much of an improvement.
Season | 2019-20 | 2020-21 |
Games played | 21 | 16 |
Minutes played | 1,007 | 982 |
Goals | 2 | 3 |
Assists | 2 | 1 |
Chances created (inc assists) | 12 | 12 |
Mins/Goal | 504 | 327 |
Mins/Goal or assist | 252 | 246 |
Tackles | 24 | 23 |
Tackle success | 66.7% | 43.5% |
Passes | 632 | 510 |
Passing accuracy | 85.6% | 82% |
Dribbles completed | 38 | 32 |
But a big factor in his upturn in form this season has been having a proper holding midfielder alongside him in Denmark international Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg.
That has allowed Ndombele to get forward more and flourish in the areas where he is more comfortable, using his pace to quickly carry the ball up the pitch.
Ndombele and his team-mates are now reaping the rewards of that new-found freedom.
"This guy, he always touches the ball and something happens," Spurs full-back Serge Aurier said. "I am happy for him, he played well and scored an amazing goal."
Ndombele has previously been described as having the ability to become one of the best midfielders in the world. It now appears he is firmly on the right path to realising that potential.
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Spurs have thrown away more points than anyone from winning positions. Arguably should be top of table. Robbed a couple of times and threw a few games away. Something is happening with Jose though...
Jose is his own worst enemy at times but he has made Spurs a much more resilient side whilst, at the same time, nurturing the clubs attacking flair in the shape of Son and Kane.
The Bale situation is frankly baffling considering Levy's well known "value for money" mantra.
Happy to be in the mix , I don't believe we will win the league but a cup and a top 4 finish would be a very good season.
Also as mentioned by Jose and pretty much all managers it's about attitude & work ethic, you have to wonder just what Deli Alli is doing or not!
Of course he was lucky to hit the goal
Shots where you are not facing the goal are always like that
If it had landed on a Spurs player's head three yards out, people would be saying that was lucky and Ndombele was trying to score
We haven't always had much luck when signing players from France recently and it does take them time to adjust to the physicality of the Prem.
I still think Jose was wrong to publicly comment so negatively last season about Ndombele's form and fitness, keep things behind closed doors.
They trained in the public park nearby in their Tottenham training kit and were seen by loads of people
I think that is when Mourinho put the hard word on Ndombele that he needed
Sometimes, adversity teaches us to defy it and concentrate on a better future ahead